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Data Mining: Exploring Data

Data Mining: Exploring Data. Lecture Notes for Chapter 3 Introduction to Data Mining by Tan, Steinbach, Kumar. What is data exploration?. A preliminary exploration of the data to better understand its characteristics. Key motivations of data exploration include

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Data Mining: Exploring Data

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  1. Data Mining: Exploring Data Lecture Notes for Chapter 3 Introduction to Data Mining by Tan, Steinbach, Kumar

  2. What is data exploration? A preliminary exploration of the data to better understand its characteristics. • Key motivations of data exploration include • Helping to select the right tool for preprocessing or analysis • Making use of humans’ abilities to recognize patterns • People can recognize patterns not captured by data analysis tools

  3. Techniques Used In Data Exploration • In EDA, as originally defined by Tukey • The focus was on visualization • Clustering and anomaly detection were viewed as exploratory techniques • In our discussion of data exploration, we focus on • Summary statistics • Visualization • Online Analytical Processing (OLAP)

  4. Iris Sample Data Set • Many of the exploratory data techniques are illustrated with the Iris Plant data set. • Can be obtained from the UCI Machine Learning Repository http://www.ics.uci.edu/~mlearn/MLRepository.html • From the statistician Douglas Fisher • Three flower types (classes): • Setosa • Virginica • Versicolour • Four (non-class) attributes • Sepal width and length • Petal width and length Virginica. Robert H. Mohlenbrock. USDA NRCS. 1995. Northeast wetland flora: Field office guide to plant species. Northeast National Technical Center, Chester, PA. Courtesy of USDA NRCS Wetland Science Institute.

  5. Summary Statistics • Summary statistics are numbers that summarize properties of the data • Summarized properties include frequency, mean and standard deviation • Most summary statistics can be calculated in a single pass through the data

  6. Frequency and Mode • The frequency of an attribute value is the percentage of time the value occurs in the data set • For example, given the attribute ‘gender’ and a representative population of people, the gender ‘female’ occurs about 50% of the time. • The mode of a an attribute is the most frequent attribute value • The notions of frequency and mode are typically used with categorical data

  7. Percentiles • For continuous data, the notion of a percentile is more useful. Given an ordinal or continuous attribute x and a number p between 0 and 100, the pth percentile is a value of x such that p% of the observed values of x are less than . • For instance, the 50th percentile is the value such that 50% of all values of x are less than .

  8. Measures of Location: Mean and Median • The mean is the most common measure of the location of a set of points. • However, the mean is very sensitive to outliers. • Thus, the median or a trimmed mean is also commonly used.

  9. Measures of Spread: Range and Variance • Range is the difference between the max and min • The variance or standard deviation is the most common measure of the spread of a set of points.

  10. Visualization Visualization is the conversion of data into a visual or tabular format so that the characteristics of the data and the relationships among data items or attributes can be analyzed or reported. • Visualization of data is one of the most powerful and appealing techniques for data exploration. • Humans have a well developed ability to analyze large amounts of information that is presented visually • Can detect general patterns and trends • Can detect outliers and unusual patterns

  11. Example: Sea Surface Temperature • The following shows the Sea Surface Temperature (SST) for July 1982 • Tens of thousands of data points are summarized in a single figure

  12. Representation • Is the mapping of information to a visual format • Data objects, their attributes, and the relationships among data objects are translated into graphical elements such as points, lines, shapes, and colors. • Example: • Objects are often represented as points • Their attribute values can be represented as the position of the points

  13. Visualization Techniques: Histograms • Histogram • Usually shows the distribution of values of a single variable • Divide the values into bins and show a bar plot of the number of objects in each bin. • The height of each bar indicates the number of objects • Shape of histogram depends on the number of bins • Example: Petal Width (10 and 20 bins, respectively)

  14. Two-Dimensional Histograms • Show the joint distribution of the values of two attributes • Example: petal width and petal length • What does this tell us?

  15. outlier 75th percentile 50th percentile 25th percentile 10th percentile 90th percentile Visualization Techniques: Box Plots • Box Plots • Invented by J. Tukey • Another way of displaying the distribution of data • Following figure shows the basic part of a box plot

  16. Example of Box Plots • Box plots can be used to compare attributes

  17. Visualization Techniques: Scatter Plots • Scatter plots • Attributes values determine the position • Two-dimensional scatter plots most common, but can have three-dimensional scatter plots • Often additional attributes can be displayed by using the size, shape, and color of the markers that represent the objects • It is useful to have arrays of scatter plots can compactly summarize the relationships of several pairs of attributes • See example on the next slide

  18. Scatter Plot Array of Iris Attributes

  19. Visualization Techniques: Contour Plots • Contour plots • Useful when a continuous attribute is measured on a spatial grid • They partition the plane into regions of similar values • The contour lines that form the boundaries of these regions connect points with equal values • The most common example is contour maps of elevation • Can also display temperature, rainfall, air pressure, etc. • An example for Sea Surface Temperature (SST) is provided on the next slide

  20. Celsius Contour Plot Example: SST Dec, 1998

  21. Visualization Techniques: Matrix Plots • Matrix plots • Can plot the data matrix • This can be useful when objects are sorted according to class • Typically, the attributes are normalized to prevent one attribute from dominating the plot • Plots of similarity or distance matrices can also be useful for visualizing the relationships between objects • Examples of matrix plots are presented on the next two slides

  22. standard deviation Visualization of the Iris Data Matrix

  23. Visualization of the Iris Correlation Matrix

  24. Visualization Techniques: Parallel Coordinates • Parallel Coordinates • Used to plot the attribute values of high-dimensional data • Instead of using perpendicular axes, use a set of parallel axes • The attribute values of each object are plotted as a point on each corresponding coordinate axis and the points are connected by a line • Thus, each object is represented as a line • Often, the lines representing a distinct class of objects group together, at least for some attributes • Ordering of attributes is important in seeing such groupings

  25. Parallel Coordinates Plots for Iris Data

  26. Other Visualization Techniques • Star Plots • Similar approach to parallel coordinates, but axes radiate from a central point • The line connecting the values of an object is a polygon • Chernoff Faces • Approach created by Herman Chernoff • This approach associates each attribute with a characteristic of a face • The values of each attribute determine the appearance of the corresponding facial characteristic • Each object becomes a separate face • Relies on human’s ability to distinguish faces

  27. Star Plots for Iris Data Setosa Versicolour Virginica

  28. Chernoff Faces for Iris Data Setosa Versicolour Virginica

  29. Datawarehouse and OLAP 29

  30. What is a Data Warehouse? • A decision support database that is maintained separately from the organization’s operational database • “A data warehouse is asubject-oriented, integrated, time-variant, and nonvolatilecollection of data in support of management’s decision-making process.”—W. H. Inmon

  31. Data Warehouse—Subject-Oriented • Organized around major subjects, such as customer, product, sales • Focusing on the modeling and analysis of data for decision makers, not on daily operations or transaction processing

  32. Data Warehouse—Integrated • Constructed by integrating multiple, heterogeneous data sources • relational databases, flat files, on-line transaction records

  33. Data Warehouse—Time Variant • The time horizon for the data warehouse is significantly longer than that of operational systems • Data warehouse data: provide information from a historical perspective (e.g., past 5-10 years)

  34. Data Warehouse—Nonvolatile • A physically separate store of data transformed from the operational environment • Operational update of data does not occur in the data warehouse environment • Requires only two operations in data accessing: • initial loading of data and access of data

  35. OLTP vs. OLAP

  36. What is OLAP http://openmultimedia.ie.edu/OpenProducts/Business_Intelligence/Business_Intelligence/index.html Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques

  37. Other sources Extract Transform Load Refresh Operational DBs Data Warehouse: A Multi-Tiered Architecture OLAP Server Analysis Query Reports Data mining Serve Data Warehouse Data Marts Data Sources Data Storage OLAP Engine Front-End Tools

  38. Extraction, Transformation, and Loading (ETL) • Data extraction • get data from multiple, heterogeneous, and external sources • Data cleaning • detect errors in the data and rectify them when possible • Data transformation • convert data from legacy or host format to warehouse format • Load • sort, summarize, consolidate, compute views, check integrity, and build indicies and partitions • Refresh • propagate the updates from the data sources to the warehouse

  39. From Tables to Data Cubes • A data warehouse is based on a multidimensional data model which views data in the form of a data cube • A data cube, such as sales, allows data to be modeled and viewed in multiple dimensions • Dimension tables, such as item (item_name, brand, type), or time(day, week, month, quarter, year)

  40. View of Warehouses and Hierarchies

  41. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques

  42. Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques SQL SERVER Anaylsis Services OLAP Operations http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctUiHZHr-5M

  43. Date 2Qtr 1Qtr sum 3Qtr 4Qtr TV Product U.S.A PC VCR sum Canada Country Mexico sum All, All, All A Sample Data Cube Total annual sales of TVs in U.S.A.

  44. Typical OLAP Operations • Roll up (drill-up): summarize data • by climbing up hierarchy or by dimension reduction • Drill down (roll down): reverse of roll-up • from higher level summary to lower level summary or detailed data, or introducing new dimensions • Slice and dice:project and select • Pivot (rotate): • reorient the cube, visualization, 3D to series of 2D planes

  45. Fig. 3.10 Typical OLAP Operations

  46. Browsing a Data Cube

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